Business-Driven Architect

Brenda Michelson

Federal CIO appointment, enterprise architecture and innovating / improving via technology

user-pic
Vote 0 Votes

By now, you've probably heard that Vivek Kundra has been appointed Federal Chief Information Officer (CIO) at the White House.  I don't know Mr. Kundra, but I've seen nothing but positive reaction from those who do.

What I find interesting is the responsibility of enterprise architecture as described in the press release:

"The Federal Chief Information Officer directs the policy and strategic planning of federal information technology investments and is responsible for oversight of federal technology spending.  The Federal CIO establishes and oversees enterprise architecture to ensure system interoperability and information sharing and ensure information security and privacy across the federal government. The CIO will also work closely with the Chief Technology Officer to advance the President’s technology agenda."

The next paragraph continues with the CIO's business mission:

"President Obama said, "Vivek Kundra will bring a depth of experience in the technology arena and a commitment to lowering the cost of government operations to this position.  I have directed him to work to ensure that we are using the spirit of American innovation and the power of technology to improve performance and lower the cost of government operations. As Chief Information Officer, he will play a key role in making sure our government is running in the most secure, open, and efficient way possible.""

Now, my question is, doesn't (shouldn't) enterprise architecture also contribute to "American innovation" and using "the power of technology to improve performance and lower the cost of government operations."?

Is this delineation of enterprise architecture and chief technology office restricted to US government IT?  Or, is it starting to crop up in corporate IT as well?

What do you think? Is this delineation a good thing?  Or, do you find it troublesome? 

Leave a comment

Brenda Michelson, Principal of Elemental Links, shares her view on architectural strategies, technology trends, business, and relevance.

Brenda Michelson

Brenda Michelson is the principal of Elemental Links an advisory & consulting practice focused on business-driven IT. Brenda spent 19 years in corporate IT, most recently as Chief Enterprise Architect for L.L. Bean. At L.L. Bean, Brenda was responsible for the articulation and execution of the enterprise architecture strategy (J2EE transformation, enterprise integration, SOA and EDA), strategic planning, portfolio management and talent development. Previous to L.L. Bean, over the span of 10 years, Brenda provided development services for Insurance, Banking, a Chip Manufacturer and a world leader in Aircraft Engine Design & Manufacturing. Email Brenda. Follow her on Twitter.

Subscribe

BDA Feed
BDA Comments Feed


Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Recently Commented On

Monthly Archives

ADVERTISEMENT